Brandon Lacy Sr. – Edges Coach – Florida Atlantic
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A summary of the transcript is available below the video.
DEFENSIVE EDGE MECHANICS: ZONE READ TECHNIQUES
This coaching clinic focuses on teaching defensive ends proper technique for defending zone read plays and option football. The core philosophy centers on reading blocks, maintaining proper positioning, and executing two key techniques: smash and squeeze.
FUNDAMENTAL STANCE AND READ PROGRESSION
Defenders should use an inside foot back stance when coming out of their stance. Upon seeing a down block by the offensive tackle, take eyes down the line of scrimmage while maintaining a near foot compression stance – similar to a tackling position but staying square to the line. The read progression follows three levels: level one (offensive lineman), level two (off-ball players), and level three (quarterback mesh point). Critical rule: never cross the line of scrimmage when engaging blockers, as this gives up blocking surfaces and eliminates lateral pursuit ability.
SMASH TECHNIQUE
The “smash and sneak” technique involves placing two hands on the offensive tackle – inside hand on outside number, outside hand on hip – and pushing him down to restrict the gap. This is primarily used for B gap bubble situations with gap exchange schemes. The defender takes the dive first, then plays the quarterback. When a puller or kickout blocker appears, the defender executes a “spill” move by getting vertical up the field through the blocker while keeping shoulders square – never turning sideways or trading one-for-one. This technique is effective against counter plays, split zone, and inside zone schemes.
SQUEEZE TECHNIQUE
Squeeze technique uses one hand on the offensive lineman’s hip instead of two hands, allowing the defender to stay close enough to tackle anything off the blocker’s backside while playing quarterback-to-dive assignments. This is typically used on the three-technique side or when a linebacker (“buddy”) is blitzing the B gap. The defender maintains eyes down the line and keeps toes on the line of scrimmage, making this effective against stretch plays and outside zone runs while maintaining proper leverage to force early pitches.
KEY COACHING POINTS
The mantra “eat ends, attack tackles” emphasizes aggressive engagement. Defenders must work gap exchanges with linebackers or safeties, stay disciplined with hand placement and foot positioning, and trust their eye progression to react to multiple threats including dive, quarterback, and pitch options.